The Mex Files

Entries categorized as ‘Aguascalientes’

The course of justice

26 February 2010 · Leave a Comment

Not all Mexican crime involves narcotics or murder of even bribery.  And not all criminals get away.  And the wheels of justice don’t always turn slowly.  In most of Mexico, your typical crime story in the local paper is a nota roja — COMPLETE WITH PERP PIX — like this one, presented in its entire glory (my translation) taken from the Aguascalientes on-line news aggegator,  Crisol Plural:

Having been identified as the suspect who stole a 26-inch wheel white bicycle, as well as a burglar, the police officers in charge of unit 1305, captured at 19:45 pm Arturo Martinez Campos, a 34 year-old mason in the Municipio Libre sub-division of colonia San Miguelito y Esfuerzo National..

Maria de los Angeles Garcia Montoya is the person who accused Arthur and who says he tried to steal about 200 meters of electrical wiring:  so after he was apprehended he was presented immediately to the judge.

Categories: Aguascalientes · Crime and Punishment · Legal system · Nota Rojas (Crime News) · Policia · Provincia

Separation of Church and Party… to save the Church

21 July 2009 · 2 Comments

While it’s not surprising that the Catholic Church is worried about its falling “market share” in Mexico, what is surprising is that a study done by the Archdiocese of Guadalajara discovers that one reason the Church is viewed as irrelevant by increasing numbers of Mexicans is an image problem — it’s seen as too closely identified with PAN.

Claudio Bañuelos original article (my translation) appeared in La Jornada (19 July 2009):

Aguascalientes, Ags. The auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Guadalajara, Jose Trinidad González Rodriguez, warns that it is “urgent” for the Catholic Church to separate its “image” from that of the National Action Party (PAN) because too many of the faithful in Jalisco and elsewhere see the Church as supporting the party.

González , who also is the coordinating Bishop for Charismatic Catholic Renewal said he came to this conclusion after looking at a study which showed that many in the country were leaving the Church for political reasons. The “Pan debacle”, he said, was predicted by this study, and is likely to be a further drag on the Catholic Church.

The results call for the Church to “always keep itself far from any particular political party platform, respecting all of them,” he said.

He emphasized that to maintain the faithful and to rescue and reconquer others for Christ and his gospel, Catholicism must be seen as impartial and apolitical, “while of course priests and bishops have the same rights as any citizen,” he added.

The same study showed that in cities like Leon, Guanajuato, Zacatecas, Colima, Aguascalientes and Tépic, Nayarit, there is “hope” that children and adolescents will not loose their faith, but that in Guadelajara – the capital of Jalisco – “it’s a losing battle.”

Furthermore, the study shows that seventy percent of professionals no longer go to Mass. “It is urgent we develop a new pastorate focused on the Holy Spirit, to stop the slide in the youth population we’re seeing presently in the Archdioceses of Guadalajara. We need a new kind of priest, to make sure we don’t lose them, as we have the business class, the professionals, the union members and the politicians – to stop them from going down the tubes, too,” he admitted.

One bright spot for the Church was the finding that eighty percent of women trust their priests, but – at the same time – are more critical of the clergy in general. “This reveals another very difficult field of endeavor that the Church needs to consider,” Bishop González added.

González also touched on what he sees as a new religious attitude, well-established in this country: “valemadrismo” by which he means the family no longer attends the liturgy, leaving it for the women and younger children. This is the reason he insists “The Church’s challenge is to reclaim the Christ of the Gospels for the millions of adolescents and the professionals who have given up on parishes, Masses and priests.

What makes this study — and its conclusions — doubly interesting is that the Archdiocese of Guadalajara is known for its conservative clerics and the sometimes overt displays of political partisanship on the part of its clergy. Much of the area covered by the Archdiocese was that where the Cristero movement of the 1920s was strongest, and what foreigners often mean by “the real Mexico”… and where they assume religious piety is a part of the culture.

Categories: Aguascalientes · Catholic Church · Colima · Guadalajara · Jalisco · La Raza (Mexican cultures and peoples) · Nayarit · PAN · Politica (Mexicana) · Provincia · Real Mexico · Religion

PAN: ick! attack

21 January 2009 · 1 Comment

Not  the International Herald Tribune, but an unrelated English-language Caracas paper, the Latin American Herald Tribune reports:

MEXICO CITY — Kissing in public [or, rather "inappropriate kissing" -- whatever that might be] will be punished with fines and even jail time in the central Mexican city of Guanajuato under a new municipal ordinance that also bans begging, using rude words and street peddling.

The measure emerged Tuesday from a municipal government controlled by the rightist National Action Party, or PAN, which has been in power at the national level since 2000.

The ordinance also punishes tourism promoters who approach motorists, people who cross streets without using pedestrian bridges, those offering windshield-cleaning services and those who engage in street demonstrations.

For example, the law bans “obscene words and attitudes in public places that offend third parties, as well as touching obscenely in public spaces.”

Those who fail to abide by the ordinance can be punished with 36 hours in jail and fines up to 1,500 pesos ($108).

PAN’s “piety wing”, like the “Christian Conservative” wing of the U.S. Republican Party, has a thing for protecting “traditional values.”  They seem to forget that traditional values in Mexico include making out in the street (with homes crowded with aunts, grand-fathers, third cousins and whomever happens to be in town, where else are horny teenagers to go.

And, traditional values includes swearing at crappy drivers as you blithely jaywalk.

AND… demonstrations (like the mega-demonstrations organized by then defeated gubenatorial candidate Vicente Fox in 1991, which led to the appointment of an interim PAN governor, and the beginning of the party’s emergence as a serious opposition to then-ruling PRI) are more than just a traditional value… they’re a national art form.

Obviously, I don’t think this municipal ordinance is aimed at “traditional values”, but — again, like Christian Conservatives in the U.S. — is an attempt to pass off intolerance under the guise of civic order.

The most serious problem with the new ordinance is the attempt to suppress “unofficial” demonstrations. It’s likely to misfire very badly, increasing the likelihood of violence during what is otherwise a somewhat annoying, but necessary part of the democratic process.

The rest is just the perverse attempts by the stick-in-the-mud piety types to suppress whatever it is they find “icky”.

This isn’t all that different from the Christian Conservatives who took office as Republican officials throughout the United States in 1980 on Ronald Reagan’s coattails.  In Mexico, it was Vicente Fox’s 2000 election coattails that brought “piety wing” PANistas into office in municipalities throughout the country.  In Aguascalientes, the new administration had  signs posted in the city parks reading “No dogs or homosexuals”  — the dogs unlikely to organize a protest, but the homosexuals certain to, though they were beaten up by gangs organized by the Legionaries of Christ (as were Mormons, Protestants and indigenous people).

Even within PAN, this was thought to be a little extreme, and eventually, the signs came down, and — though there are still reports of official abuse against minorities, Aguascalientes is not much on Mexican political or cultural radar.  It’s not really a tourist stop, and its local political actions aren’t much reported nationally — think of it as the Nebraska or Iowa of Mexico.

Guanajuanto IS a major tourist center, both for foreigners and Mexicans.  It is an internationally known artistic and cultural center.  The annual Festival Internacional Cervantino  every October  in recent years  has become an unofficial Mardi Gras for the hoardes of young, well-educated, “artsy” visitors who come not just for the “official” artistic performances, but for the street and coffee-house  entertainment — music, theater, visual arts, poetry slams, dance.  And where there are the arts there are… uh… as the euphimism had it, “artistic types.”

City police are likely to look the other way at “artistic” visitors (especially those speaking a foreign language and spending money freely), but there could be an incident which would seriously impact Mexico’s growing reputation for tolerance.

Thankfully, every party in the country — including the pragmatic PANistas — recognizes this is nutty, and unlikely to pass Constitutional muster.

Categories: 2000 Mexican Presidential Election · Aguascalientes · Catholic Church · Festival International Cervantino · Gays · Guanajuato · Human Rights · La Raza (Mexican cultures and peoples) · Manifestaciones · Mexican History 1921+ · PAN · Politica (Mexicana) · Provincia · Real Mexico · Religion · Right Wing Idiots · Ronald Reagan · Teenagers · Tourism

Downsizing the police

9 February 2008 · Leave a Comment

From Vivarlatino:

In Aguascalientes, Mexico, cops have a problem. It’s not low pay, or even violence, but rather big old panzas. That’s why the city is providing the policias with an attractive incentive: lose weight and get paid.

A city spokesperson for Aguascalientes said that 35% of the 3000 police officers in the city are an average of 20 kilos [44 lbs.] overweight.

They will pay 100 pesos (about $10) for each kilogram that they lose, which means that will be able to receive 2000 pesos (200 dollars) once they manage to eliminate the excess weight,” said the source.

The city is concerned that obese cops have a really hard time participating in chases, and to that end, want officers to stop eating the “T” diet: tortillas, tamales and tortas.

In other police news, Mexico City (which has been weeding out fat coppers for the last couple of years) dedicated a new building today that probably won’t be on anyone’s tourist itinerary: a state of the art CSI lab and morgue. The 157.5 million peso facility — besides all the cool CSI stuff and a genetics lab — has space for 150 guests at a time. In a pinch, there is storage space for up to 250 cadavers … as long as they aren’t fat cops from Aguascalientes, I suppose.

Categories: Aguascalientes · Ciudad de México · Health · Nutrition · Policia · Provincia

Eeewww… abstention in Oaxaca nearly 80% (UPDATE)

5 August 2007 · 1 Comment

UPDATED MONDAY AM)

Oaxaca is reported to have had a “quiet” election. So far, PRI is receiving slightly less than half of those votes. Well, yeah… ballots were burned in La Ventosa and a reporter shot in Salina Cruz, which counts as an incident free election in that state. IEEO (Instituto Estatal Electoral de Oaxaca) early results show that only about 12 to 13% about 20% of the voters bothered to show up for the Legislative Elections.

PRI State Executive Committee spokesman Heliodoro Díaz Escárraga, argued that the low abstention rate was not meaningful saying “it’s not that people didn’t vote, it’s that those who did voted peacably” that was the mark of success. Preliminary results show PRI winning every one of the 25 directly elected Legislative seats.

Results posted Monday at 8 AM show PRI with 47.6%; “Benefit of All” (PRD-PT-Convengencia) with 27.5%; and PAN with 13%. I’m expecting the “usos y costumbres” votes will be mostly PRI votes. The State Legislature will probably have a few more PAN and PRD-PT-Convergencia proportionally selected delegates, but the home of Benito Juarez seems to have given up on electoral politics for now..

The Baja California IEE reports a 30-35% turnout. Both PRI gubernatorial candidate Jorge Hank and PAN’s José Osuna claim to have won. Most local papers are reporting Osuna won by anywhere between 4 and 10 percent.

The only surprise was in Aguascalientes. The Bajio state is ground zero for PAN, but it only appears to have won 5 of the 17 Legislative seats, with PRI taking the rest. Turnout here was about 45%

In what may be significant, several out of state members of the SNTE (the Teachers’ Union, headed by Esther Elba Gordilla, the “Señora Hoffa” of Mexican labor and former PRI Central Committee member, whose broke away to start her own party — PANAL) were detained for illegally trying to vote in Baja Calfornia. In BC, PANAL was part of PAN’s fusion ticket, though the PRI Executive Committee is considering whether or not to allow PANAL candidates to stand with PRI in future state elections.

Categories: Aguascalientes · Baja California · FAP (PRD-PT-Convergencia) · Oaxaca · Oaxaca en luche (2006) · PAN · PRD · Politica (Mexicana) · Provincia

PRI and pre-Campaign Coverage

3 August 2007 · Leave a Comment

State elections are this Sunday in Oaxaca, Baja California and Aguascalientes.

While any win in Oaxaca is going to be suspect (and even some within the party expect to do badly), the winners in these states may be PRI. The PRD-led coalition is the main opposition force in Oaxaca (in elective politics, that is).

In Baja California, the colorful (or notorious or sinister, depending on your attitude) Carlos Hank Rhon could very well win the Governorship. Widely beleived to have oganized crime ties, and the prime suspect in several unsolved murders, including that of pesky investigative reporters, Hank is naturally running as a “law and order” candidate. James McKinney’s excellent profile (subscription required) in Wednesday’s New York Times, makes me think of Hank as a Mexican version of Lousiana’s Eddy Edwards. When Edwards ran for Governor against white supremacist David Duke, Edwards supporters made bumper stickers reading “Vote Edwards. A scoundrel, but not a Nazi”.

The PRI, in a fusion ticket with the Greens and a state party, may have the edge, though PAN might hold on to their legislative majority. PRI-istas were caught recently distributing food bank rations in poor neighborhoods, leading the Archdiocese of Tijuana to remind the faithful that buying or selling a vote is equally sinful. But, then again, the PRI is traditionally an anti-clerical party, and there was no word on whether the food donations includes loaves and fishes.

I really pay very little attention to Aguascalientes, and haven’t a clue what to expect there. PAN has done well there every since sweeping on on Vicente Fox’s coattails in 2000. Like in some U.S. states, where Republicans swept into office on Ronald Reagan’s coattails, the religious conservatives thought they had a mandate in Aguascalientes, like they thought they had in places like Kansas or Iowa.

In Kansas, it was ridicule over attempts to teach “creationism” in the schools that did in the Republicans. In Aguacalientes it may be gays and swear words. In 2001, the PAN city council in Aguascalientes had signs posted in the city parks reading “No dogs or gays.” Widely reported and internationally ridiculed, even those who supported PAN’s conservative economic policies were less than thrilled with the Party. People just laughed when the city council last year tried to enforce a law against swearing in public. Fuck it, they said.

Aguascalientes has been relatively prosperous, and this is the center of PAN country, but people may be ready for a change. PRD has very little presence in the state, making PRI the only real alternative.

Complicating things, the PRI leaders are meeting this weekend in Durango to discuss the party’s future direction. Having ceded it’s ideological traditions (it is still a member party of Socialist International) to the PRD, and unable to mount sucessful national campaigns (PAN seems to have the edge in dubious electoral victories now), it seems to have no national focus, and is a dramatically different party depending on what state you are in. The PRI sponsored abortion reforms in the Federal District, while opposing them in Puebla. What happens in the states will play an important part in determining whether the party redefines itself, or continue letting internal disputes allow opponents to peel off segments of its core support, as with Esther Elba Gordilla, who pulled out of the party to form her own minor party, which sides with PAN, except in Oaxaca, where Gordilla (the head of the official teacher’s union) backs Ulises Ruiz and PRI over her own dissidentteachers.

Party chair Beatriz Paredes is an oddball PRI leader — the honest ones are usually incompetent and the competent ones are crooks, but she’s both honest and competent — has her work cut out for her.

Categories: 2000 Mexican Presidential Election · 2006 Elections · Aguascalientes · Baja California · Beatriz Paredes · FAP (PRD-PT-Convergencia) · Felipe Calderón · Gays · Human Rights · Indocumentados · Mexican History 1921+ · Minor parties · Oaxaca · Oaxaca en luche (2006) · PAN · PRD · PRI · Politica (Mexicana) · Provincia · Ulises Ruiz Ortiz · Vicente Fox